In-silico screening of missense nsSNPs in Delta-opioid receptor protein and their restoring tendency on MCRT interaction; focusing on dynamic nature

Delta-opioid receptor protein (OPRD1) is one of the potential targets for treating pain. The presently available opioid agonists are known to cause unnecessary side effects. To discover a novel opioid agonist, our research group has synthesized a chimeric peptide MCRT and proved its potential activi...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of biological macromolecules 2024-08, Vol.275 (Pt 2), p.133710, Article 133710
Hauptverfasser: Simon, Jerine Peter, Dong, Shouliang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Delta-opioid receptor protein (OPRD1) is one of the potential targets for treating pain. The presently available opioid agonists are known to cause unnecessary side effects. To discover a novel opioid agonist, our research group has synthesized a chimeric peptide MCRT and proved its potential activity through in vivo analysis. Non-synonymous SNPs (nsSNPs) missense mutations affect the functionality and stability of proteins leading to diseases. The current research was focused on understanding the role of MCRT in restoring the binding tendency of OPRD1 nsSNPs missense mutations on dynamic nature in comparison with Deltorphin-II and morphiceptin. The deleterious effects of nsSNPs were analyzed using various bioinformatics tools for predicting structural, functional, and oncogenic influence. The shortlisted nine nsSNPs were predicted for allergic reactions, domain changes, post-translation modification, multiple sequence alignment, secondary structure, molecular dynamic simulation (MDS), and peptide docking influence. Further, the docked complex of three shortlisted deleterious nsSNPs was analyzed using an MDS study, and the highly deleterious shortlisted nsSNP A149T was further analyzed for higher trajectory analysis. MCRT restored the binding tendency influence caused by nsSNPs on the dynamics of stability, functionality, binding affinity, secondary structure, residues connection, motion, and folding of OPRD1 protein. •The missense nsSNPs mutation causes a deleterious effect on the OPRD1 protein.•The highly deleterious OPRD1 nsSNPs alter the dynamic of peptide binding.•MCRT has the best potential to restore the influence of OPRD1 nsSNPs mutation.
ISSN:0141-8130
1879-0003
1879-0003
DOI:10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.133710